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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 29 Apr 1926, p. 3

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a < Prices reasonable. _ * _ Goods culled for and delivered. ; aermurte hn nc sc n t t Bd oi ced ie n en ym lt 0t3 i0 1B t Rev. Geo. Epp of Cleveland, in a sterecooptician lecture in _ Zion ehurch last week on "Evangelicals on the March" comprehensively reâ€" viewed the missionary efforts of the shurch and showed the entire field of Evangelical missionary work both in American and Foreign fields. x OUTLINED MISSIONARY WORK aefemie n on t e o m n STRAWBERRY â€"60¢ per 100 ; $5 per 1000 O.A.C. Pocomoke . Rebinding books 6 g Bibles, Hymn and Prayerbooks a specialty. Add more books to your home library by having your favorite magazine bound into books. By submitting to a, simple exâ€" ghllunl'fllum pgeugmmm glasses will make to your visâ€" PHONE 2777W,. KITCHENER, Pay no attention to those flowery and exaggerated adverâ€" tisements when you can get a better truss right here and for less money, with the privilegke of getting it changed or fixed at any time. & â€" They ape no under strap, #‘hf.:ga sponge rubber E:m:e and fitted at 55 King | *‘E., Kitchener, near the Postoffice. * Oscar Burkholder °_ Bookbinder 570 King 8t. W.. Phone 2686 . Kitchener, â€" Ont. en en t t in i t tm d n en C i 1 e t i n e t t N0 O tm Initialing Club Bags, Suitâ€" _RUPTURE _ T5¢ per 100; $7 per 1000 signed and â€".â€" Built Smail Special J. C. Lehmann Detivered anywhere in ‘Waterieo County. Better Vision |â€" For Appointment. Bresiau,. Ont. When You See a Pair of STEELE‘S Glasses PLANTS W oelfle Bros. Ltd. Machinists and Toolmakers Ratablished 1906 â€"â€"â€" you can rest assured that the wearer is satisfhied. ago. Froim New York heâ€"went to Brantford where he was engaged as an .mnnu‘nr ‘at the governâ€" ment experimental station, having graduatedâ€"in ‘the old â€"country as ‘a landscape gardener and nurseryâ€" man. In 1910 Mr. Koehler moved to Kitchener andâ€"entered "the employ of A. L. Breithaupt in charge of the grounds, â€"following which he was engaged by the Bérlin Floral Comâ€" pany as a nurseryman. He left this position following his appointment as superintendent of public parks in Kitchener. srme Injuribs sustained "hÂ¥ _ Hitch: while driving his coupe about two -.uq:,mhhhhfiu the . K..W. . Hospital on Monday morning.. He appeared to be proâ€" gressing favorably â€" untilâ€" Sunday afternoon when he took a turn for the worsé and gradually sank until The late Mr. Koehler was born in Berlin,‘ Germany, in 1380, coming to this country about eighteen . years Mr. Koehler was a member of the Masonic Order, Grand River Lodge; Kitchener Lodge R.AM, and was also affiliated _ with the Moose Lodge and Optimist Club. He was Luntheran in religion. Surviving him are his wife, two daughters, two brothers and two â€"sisters. TEACHER BEREAVED . _ A wide circle of friends will symâ€" pathize with Miss Mary Lynch of the Collegiate staff whose father passed away last week following a severe attack of pneumonia. Passes Away at K..W. Hospital « Monday, Aged 406 Years. Leadâ€" ingâ€" Landscape Artist: A unique feature of the program given at the meeting of the Woâ€" men‘s Missionary Society of Zion Evangelical church held Jast week was a message in person from the first president of the Zion W. M. S. organized. in 1903 by Mrs. L H. Wagner, ofâ€" Regina, Sask. Inâ€" .connection | with= complaints that members of the Kitchener Enâ€" gineering department are doing priâ€" vate work in competition with men engaged in private practice, it was decided that the Board of Works could not go on with the investigaâ€" tion asked until statements made are either proven or withdrawn. It was alleged that considerable busiâ€" ness is secured in the daytime by a member or membefs of the staff as a result of coming in contact with individuals and making measâ€" nrements for the city which affect the lot lines of the individuals conâ€" cerned. It was further alleged that rakeâ€"offs were being #ecured for some members of the engineering staff for getting dusiness for felâ€" low members of the staff. ESTIMATE OF CoST OF â€"COLLEGIATE ONLY EXTENDED BY $105 At a meeting of the advisory and vocational Board of the K.â€"W. Colâ€" legiate and Vocational Institute a communication was read from the department of Education in which it is stated that the recent addition to the books of the Collegiate inâ€" dicatés that the school now has the full value of equipment to which the department will contribute acâ€" cording to the present contract. It is worthy of note that the wm‘ cost of the school with site and equipment‘is only $105 in excess of the amount for which the deben= tures were issued or the original estimate of. the ‘cost presented to the city council for approval when the project was launched. The orâ€" iginal estimate was $495,000. The surplus which the schools had on hand reduced the figure by .$4,000, making the total debenture issue M The m cost ml-m- the site $32,132, the technical equipâ€" ment â€"$61,925 ~and the collegiate equipment $5,125. . GIVES °PERSONAL ~MESSAGE ASKED®TO SUBMIT FACTS Cylinder .. Reâ€"Grinding Pistont , Pins, Rings * RBre. Well Known ._Que of the best known and most highlyâ€"â€" regarded / imembers of the suddenly on ‘Thursday afternoon of last. week in the person of Dr. Leonâ€" ard F. Cline, of Kitchener. Although hehldllotboumii_l‘m\ug“ health for some "years, making it necessary for him to give up. his practi¢e, he was active up to the time_of | his ~ death,: having: â€"been Around as usual ag : The late Dr. Cline, who had enâ€" xyul one ‘ofâ€" the Jargest clienteles the county, was a.son of<the fate of Kitchener, aged 85 years, is his only survivor.: Born sixty years ago on a:farm, he réceived his early éduâ€" graduating in medicine at .the. Toâ€" ronto University. He aiso subse: nuently took & post graduate course in _ diseases of the â€"eye, ear and throat, in New York. He practiced in Elmira for & few years after which he followed his profession in Toledo. He later ‘came to Kitchâ€" ener where ‘he built up a lafge practice, being known as a skilled and consgcientious â€" physician..~ He filled the position of jail surgeon from 1904 up‘ to ‘the time of his death. He was unmarried. ‘The date Dr. Cline was well informed on pub lic questions in which he ‘always evinced a keen interest, and. was aleo well versed© in ancient jand modérn history. A wide circle â€" willl _ maurn the passing of Dr. Cline,: who won the regard of many friends by his kindâ€" ty disposition and desire to be of service to his fellow citizens. . . The funeral was held from the home of his aged mother on Saturâ€" day, many attending: to pay. their last tributé of respect. Rev. Munrog Dr.. Cline was a member of the Masonic Order and in politics was a staunch Conservative although inâ€" dependent in his views. f Aylmer where service â€"was held in the Disciple Church and interment was made in Mapleton cemetery. ADDRESSED KIWANIANS A stirring address was given by lev. Wilbert Mayer, C.R.,â€"pastor of St. Louis Church, Waterloo, to the Fiwanians last week on the subject ot Christianity vs Humanitarianism. BUS MIRED ON ROAD The Breslau Hill on the Kitchenâ€" erâ€"Guelph highway last week gave considerable. trouble ‘to motorists. On Thursday morning the Toronto bus got mired in a mud hole and it took two hours to get it out. > Friends will be glad to know that Mr. E. Bocker is recovering nicely following an operation at the K.â€"W. hospital, # Miss Dorothy Maiers is making a satisfactory recovery at St. Marys hospital where she underwent .an operation recently. § Messrs. B. W. N. Grigg and W. W. Breithaupt attendéd the Canaâ€" dian â€"Club conference at Toronto last week &s representatives of the Waterloo .County Canadian. Club. The leading subject discussed was the coâ€"operation of the various clubs in each district. Clubs in contiguous towns, it was pointed out, should exchange confidences and if possi ble coâ€"operate in getting the best speakérs, and arrange. for such speakors to visit several tlubs in succession. Clubs such as Gueiph, Atrattord, â€" Kitchener, .. Galt. and Brantford it was argued might conâ€" "otitute one gtoup, / _ * > . _ CRUMBLY TEETH Where there is a tendâ€" ency to limeâ€"deficiency, soft teeth or weak bones there is special need ‘for :B:woudfllvwd» a richnese of yitamins that a child needs to as 60 Years. t saeey stated" that as long ~as the agresâ€" ment is in force the county does not have to ‘pay anything"to the town under the new statute. â€"As the counâ€" ty should have received about : $29,â€" tives of the Coun Waterloo, expresi Waterloo could 1e a year trom the agreement with : ingâ€" to the: townsâ€" which pay <4% road purposes. ‘The Deputy Minister suggested the repeal ‘of the agree ities would be better Off it it were repealed andâ€" advantige taken of the new Act underâ€"which the county tiust ~pay .back fifty per cent. to every townof the amotint paid to titled to much more under the ow statute. _' :'." "a â€" Says Town "Not Entitied to Amount: The solicitor for the county, howâ€" ever, disputed the claim that Watâ€" the county, informing the deputy minister that.evidente conld be proâ€" @uced in â€"court that the town was not entitled to the amount. ‘The Deputy Minister of Highways announced â€"his Ifllhmu to again meet representativee of ‘both muniâ€" tipalities atâ€"a joint meeting for a further discussion â€"of terms for a fairâ€" settlement of the, differences and for‘cancellation of the agreeâ€" in additton to the the town receives county under the pending another it the + two mnictmm mm In the %Â¥_ (oPm“”' o meantime representatives of * both the town and county will furth: WATERLOO er consider the matter in conferâ€" ence with the© councils~ of. the two | nomumnomnnwonmimpoumntioniimmomnnut municipalities. * ' Outlines Road Legisiation m n sn f1 ..| NO MEDICINE LIKE cheques in order to onable Water|~ . or the Growing Child. loo to secure the government grant | < ~ = _â€"â€"â€"â€" = The Deputy Minister also out| ~There is no other medicine to lined the development of legislation{equal Baby‘s OQwn Tablets for little affecting the highways in‘ the last| onesâ€"whether it be for the newâ€" twentyâ€"five years ‘during ‘which be| born babe or the growing child the pointed out that one of the main| Tablets always do good. They are principles was the anticipation that| apsoluely free from opiate or other every county as a whole would &A# harmful drugs and the mother can sume the~ constructionâ€" of" g00d| atways feel safe in using.them. roads. About a half a dozen bounties| Concerning the Tablets, Mrs. including Waterloo, had for many| john Armour, R.R. 1, South Mona: years followed the township system.| ghan, Ont., says:â€""We have three He urged ~more â€" coâ€"operation _ beâ€"| rine, healthy â€" children, to whom, tween the urban and rural centres| when a medicine is needed we have and claimed that the rural motor|giyen only Baby‘s Own Tablets. The car owners were toâ€"day paying PrOâ€"| Tablets are the best medicine you 1926 were presented as well as inâ€" * :. â€" LEAGUE REORGANIZE At a meeting held last woek the Twin Clity Hoccar Leagua was reâ€" Mr. J. C. Haight, the town solictâ€" tor presented Waterloo‘s case, All the members. of the Waterloo counâ€" cll attended the hearing with the exâ€" ception ~of counciliors Weller and Jacobi, as well as town clerk Nor mak Zick and . Rngineeor Claude Necker. PAID WAGE Last week A. Gingrich of Bridgeâ€" port paid wages of $25 and costs of $5.00 when he appeared in police court on a charge of nonâ€"payment of wages to a servant girl. P for® the . season y 2. * o }I ~â€"Due For Eithér the Newborn Babe Concerning: the . Tablets, . Mrs. John Armour, R.R. 1, South â€"Monaâ€" ghan, Ont., says:â€""We have three fine, healthy â€" children, to whom, when a medicine is needed we have given only Baby‘s Own Tablets. The ‘Tablets are the. best medicine you can keep in any home where there are young children." . f Baby‘s Own Tablets are a mild but thorough Jaxative which reguâ€" late the stomach and bowels; banâ€" ish constipation and . indigestion; break up colds and simple féver and make teething easy. They. are sold by â€"medicine dealers or direct by mail at 25â€"cents a<box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockâ€" ville, Ont.. COMMISSION DISCUSSED . , SsALE OF GAS TO WATERLOO. ‘The ,, Kitchener . Public Utilities Commission at its regular meeting last: week discussed at some length the sale of gas to Waterloo,â€"the disâ€" cussion being the result of several conferences between the Kitchener and . Waterloo â€" commissioners. â€"It was contendedâ€"by some of the Kitâ€" chener commissioners that the price of gas to Waterloo should not be more than the actual cost. as the Increaged sale would . make for greater efficiency in the manufacâ€" ture of gas and would not carry with it the cost of meter reading and other overhead expense. Other members, however, contended that Kitchener . should receive greater benefit than the increased efficiâ€" ency of manufacture when suchâ€" a large qi@antity of gas was being gold. It was stated that. Waterloo would be <receiving the benefit of the ~Kitchener consumers. whereas t\oo-t_finliu,mondn‘m ‘Kitchener * consumers are responâ€" }m_m the low price .at: whick Waterloo would be enabled to purâ€" chase it â€" .. ; Mayor Asmusson . believed that while" the . cost . should be less to Waterloo owing to the quantity purâ€" chased the Kitchener ~Commission #hould aiso undoubtediy feap some profit from "the gas #old to Water 106, which would in turn be rétaurnâ€" ed to Kitchener consumers ‘, ‘The superintendent, V. 8. Melnâ€" tyte was instructed to calculate the selling : price to Waterioo which would .also give a profit to the Comâ€" mixston; The matter will be further The Waterloo Trust and â€". Savings Company â€" «â€" When you cash your interest cheques or clip your coupons for the Anterest on your Dominion of Canada. Bonds, deposit the funds in & Suvings Account and keep your money working. _ _‘! _ «_ (Operating Under Strict Government Inspection ) WATERLOO | KITCHENER â€" Charles A. ‘Boekm 4 Open an account toâ€"day and watch your balance grow f | DIRECTORS * "~â€"~ ‘*~ h Ned‘ss Capital and Reserve $965,000.00 Thos. Hiliard, President °_ _ â€"â€" <â€" Waterioo K. F. Seagram, ist Viceâ€"President â€". Waterloo Ford 8. Kumpf, 2nd>Viceâ€"President Waterioo . â€"More Flavour _ his home. parents, Mr. and Mrs. August Janâ€" sen of Centreville, has returned : to Clayton® Stroh, 15 Cameron St. is making a satisfactory recovery folâ€" lowing an operation at the K.â€"W. hospital. . GLENALLEN STORE Mr. W. H. Bernhardt attended the funeral of his father, J. Bernhardt, at Detroit last week. Frie will sympathize with Mr and M B. M. Hallman in Kitchâ€" ener, in loss of their 22 month old daughter, Vivian Marie, who died on Tuesday morning, April 20. The funeral was held on Wednesâ€" DESTROYED BY FIRE Fire completely. destroyed â€" the géneral stores of A. Wolfe and the Sirus Bell Hardware Store at Gienâ€" allen on Sunday morning, April 18. Mr. and Mrs. $Woltfe,â€"and their six year old son, who had living quarâ€" ters above the store, escaped in their night clothes and descended by way of the rear véranda. All of the contents of the hardware store were saved. "When we start to cut off our right hand, then i¢ the time to talk. â€""You will have all the anthracite you want for fire years. It will flow EMBARGO ON U.8. "l_'hnwliifltyulnmmoo! the export of coal? Dismiss it from your mind." ~ s These woere the opinion expressâ€" ed recently by Richard F. Grant, a Viceâ€"President of the M. A. Hanna Coal Company, afid an executive of the Susquehanna Collieries, â€" during the course of a brief interview after he had delivered an address to the anfmual convention of the Canadian Retail Coal Association, at Toronto. allowed on amounts of $1.00. _ and upwards, interest: comâ€".â€" _ pounded halfâ€"yearly. o 3 Don‘t lhfitm‘joymtof Mustard to occasional use with Cold It gives more flavor to hot meats tooâ€" sharpens the appetite, neutralizes the richness of fat foods and makes them easier to digest. Waterloo DEATH OF CHILD p.~â€"Â¥. . Wilson Managing Director COAL IMPOSSIBAE v 1st ay Is Geo. A. Dobbis GONDITIONS REVERSED AT . _ _ BORDER;~ CANADIANS . _ FLOCKING HOME: . ‘‘That conditions this April as com . pared with last April in regard<to _ the number of Cansdians leaving and> returning are reversed, and . that far more are coming back im‘ . stead of going out at the present | time,is the statement â€" of immigra~. tion officials at Bridgeburg and Fort ; i ed. Try it es w spmainodicntly, but consistently, â€" and judge for yourself, When 8 telephone orders can be taken in the time required for one order over the counter â€" as has been proven â€" and the amountof a telephone 3}:‘ averages Mit A mor% as can there any m in your mind that the merchant who uses the telephone _ @onsistently will win out over the rival who does not? Can you afford to overâ€" look the rapidly increasâ€" ing importance of the telephone in your m ness for increasing s and reducing the cost of selling? % Here are the facts; GALT d «7e

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